Every year on Pizza Day, the crypto community repeats: how much would 10,000 BTC be worth if you bought two pizzas back then?


But I think the most impressive part isn't "missing out on wealth," but:
A thing only truly begins to resemble money after it has been genuinely spent.
Bitcoin didn't become an asset from the white paper, nor did it turn into a belief from the exchange's K-line charts.
It started when someone was willing to trade it for a pizza, transforming for the first time from a "geek toy" into "payable value."
So don't always mock people for selling at a high during Pizza Day.
Without that transaction, many stories afterward might not have gone so smoothly.
The biggest problem for many in the crypto world is:
They only believe after it rises, mock after it falls, say zero after not being listed, and complain about the price after it gets listed.
True early consensus has never been everyone shouting "awesome" together,
but most people still dare to use real money to use it, buy it, and build with it when they think you're crazy.
BTC-0.33%
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SiYu
· 05-22 01:21
Steadfast HODL💎
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